The
only thing that we all know for sure is that relevant is
REAL. We talk about �keepin� it real� but keeping it real
is only important if it is relevant to what we�re talk in
about or what we�re trying to resolve.
The
Republican and Tea Party candidates for President got stage
this week and proceeded to hammer away at what was wrong
with the Obama administration. Interesting enough, no matter
what they said was wrong with the past three years, each
of them stated change as part of their platform too. It
was like �My change is better than your change, even if
your change has worked.� Part of what they were talking
about was relevant, but most of it wasn�t. They never got
to the root of the matter, the false wars and the weak economy
started by their party (or residuals of it).
These
debates are designed to confuse the public. I didn�t see
a relevant player on the stage. No one where, if I were
walking in front of the flat screen, I�d stop and pay attention
to them by saying, �That�s different.� I didn�t see that
kind of change on the stage.
However,
over the weekend, I had an epiphany while sitting at the
Playboy Jazz Festival, which I think makes my point. For
the last four years, we�ve heard a lot of talk about change.
Change is not something that occurs very easily, nor does
in happen very often. But when change happens, people notice.
People notice when they see something they hadn�t seen before,
or hear something they hadn�t quite heard before. When they
see it, or hear it, they immediately embrace it and are
willing to try it as something to take to heart.
The
truth about many of the problems in our society is our inability
to get to the heart of a matter in a way people can embrace.
Whether its jobs, homes, schools or whatever, we can hear
a lot of noise about what people could do, what people should
do, what government could or should do, but at the end of
the day, the conversation becomes so convoluted that the
change gets lost in irrelevance. What made Obama such a
political phenomenon was that he was markedly different.
Not just a black guy. White folk had seen one of them before,
if not a few of them. It just wasn�t the change message.
We�d heard that before. It was that he packaged himself
differently and his appeal was a combination of his look,
his sound, and his message.
For
instance, the 33rd Playboy Jazz Festival is one of the quintessential
jazz festivals where what is going on in the audience is
as much a part of the festival as what is going on up on
stage. Hosted by Bill Cosby since 1979, the festival is
a two day, two nine hour sets of entertainment that has
a cult of jazz purists that are always looking for the next
big sound. Whether it�s jazz fused with blues, salsa, pop
or R & B, the Playboy Jazz Festival is to jazz what
the Apollo is to R & B. Everybody wants to get on the
Playboy Jazz ticket, but very few headliners want to close
Playboy. It�s a difficult assignment.
Miles
Davis would never close Playboy for fear people wouldn�t
understand one of the many genres of music he created and
walk out. So, generally the headliner plays the next to
the last act, considered the primetime slot and people start
heading for their cars on the closing act. The closing then
plays to a half full house. The legendary Fourplay rocked
the house in the �primetime� slot; then people started packing.
But an early exit wasn�t their goal this past Saturday when
the Rap/Funk/R &B fusion group, The Roots, closed the
Playboy Jazz Festival. From Questlove�s first beat, The
Roots had the Hollywood Bowl on its feet�and not to head
for the exits. They brought a look, sound and message that
these jazz goers hadn�t seen before. And when I say errbody
held their spot, I mean EVERYBODY. I saw very few people
leaving, which I hadn�t seen in the 25 years I�ve been attending
Playboy Jazz Festival.
It
was an evolution of the cutting edge jazz tradition for
which Playboy had come to be known. It was a look they hadn�t
seen before. It was a sound they hadn�t heard before. And
the message in the music just grabbed the audience. It was
very relevant at the right time. It was what we call �a
moment� to watch these young brothas turn out L.A.
Not everybody knew what they had just seen, but they knew
it was righteous, raw and relevant to the music scene. The
Roots were relevant to what the people wanted to hear. When
it�s relevant, it�s right.
Many
people have a problem getting ahead of the curve, understanding
what is relevant and who is relevant at a given time. Case
in point: Newt Gingrich. His mass defection of campaign
staff last week was due to him being a relic of the past.
He was relevant in 1994, not in 2012. The American Negro
tends to get bogged down on irrelevant views by irrelevant
people. Understanding a new sound and a new message has
been a troublesome endeavor. Then came Obama and many didn�t
see that one. But they see it now. He is as different in
his time as King or Malcolm were in theirs. The Roots are
relevant examples of what a unique sound and presentation
can do. The people always know something markedly different
when they see it. They know change when they hear it.
Anything
that comes after the Roots with a similar theme will not
get the same attention. That�s what the Republicans and
the Tea Partiers are dealing with. Their change message
ain�t exactly resonating with the public. Despite their
efforts, the people ain�t exactly feelin� them right now.
They�re irrelevant. They
haven�t distanced themselves far enough to become relevant
again. President Obama will have a more difficult time being
relevant, coming behind himself. He did the impossible in
2008, made a cynical public stop, hold their spot, listen
and act. Same thing the Roots did Saturday night. The advantage
he has is that once you�ve done the impossible, difficult
is easy. The Roots showed how easy when you have the right
sound, at the right time.
What
is relevant and who is relevant is really what the world
is about today. Irrelevancy doesn�t matter.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, is a national columnist, managing
director of the
Urban Issues Forum
and author of
Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is AnthonySamad.com. Click
here
to contact Dr. Samad.
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